Elisabeth Wells
Jessie Elisabeth Wells is a New Zealand biostatistician, and is a professor emerita at the University of Otago, specialising in epidemiology and mental health research. Academic careerWells completed a PhD titled Some psychological parameters of verbal encoding at the University of Canterbury.[1] Wells completed three years of postdoctoral research at the University of Toronto, before returning to New Zealand to join the faculty of Massey University. After six years at Massey, Wells moved to the University of Otago in 1980, rising to research professor in 2010.[2][3][4] Wells is part of the Biostatistics and Computational Biology Unit at Otago, and is based at the Christchurch campus.[5] She was appointed professor emerita in 2013.[6][7] Wells is both a principal investigator and the principal statistician on the New Zealand Mental Health Survey, which was a survey of New Zealanders carried out over 2003 and 2004, examining occurrence, prevention, and treatment of mental health.[6][8] Wells's research on the survey, alongside colleagues Magnus McGee, Joanne Baxter and Jesse Kokaua, showed that non-medical drug use was widespread in New Zealand.[9] The most commonly used drugs were alcohol, which 94% of survey respondents had tried, and tobacco, which more than half had tried.[9] Wells has received grants from the Health Research Council, the New Zealand Lottery Grants Board health allocation, and the Canterbury Medical Research Foundation.[6] She has held research contracts from the Ministry of Health, Ngai Tahu Development Corporation, the Public Health Commission and the Mental Health Commission.[6] In 2009 Wells was awarded the university's Gold Medal for Research Excellence.[6] Selected works
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